Brian O'Neill was an English, Irish, or American journalist and Communist activist who worked mostly in London and Dublin between the 1920s and the 1970s.
O'Neill's origins are uncertain. In the early 1930s, John Charles McQuaid, Dean and President of Blackrock College, Dublin, later to become Archbishop of Dublin, had a Vigilance Committee which kept an eye on journalists active in Ireland, and it reported to McQuaid that O'Neill had trained in Moscow on Pravda and had gone on to work at the All Russian Co-operative Society in London until 1927, when it was broken up by the British, who saw it as a Soviet trade and espionage agency. According to the report, he then moved on to Glasgow, where he was in trouble with the police, and in 1931 arrived in Dublin, where he took the new name of Brian O'Neill and worked as a journalist and as a paid activist and pamphleteer of the Communist Party. [1]
The Irish Workers' Voice , the communists’ Irish newspaper, was relaunched soon after the W. T. Cosgrave government fell in March 1932, with O'Neill as its editor. [2] By the beginning of 1933, O'Neill was also the Ireland correspondent of Reynold's News , a left-wing English Sunday newspaper owned by the Co-operative Press, and was a leading member of the Revolutionary Workers' Groups (RWG), later to become the Communist Party of Ireland. In late March 1933, the RWG headquarters, Connolly House in Great James Street, was attacked by a mob, and O'Neill played the leading part in the defence of the building, armed with a woodman’s axe. [3]
Also in 1933, O'Neill published a book, The War for the Land in Ireland, with an introduction by Peadar O'Donnell, [4] who said in his introduction "… it is not without significance that this task is undertaken by Brian O'Neill, a member of the youthful Communist movement in Ireland." [5] In the book, O'Neill concluded that peasant land ownership of economically viable holdings would not solve what he saw as the fundamental problem of the land. The solution he proposed was a "radical inroad on property rights", with Irish agriculture developing on the Soviet socialist pattern. [5]
In a memorandum of the Irish Department of Justice in 1936, O'Neill was reported to be originally from Manchester, educated at University College Dublin, a member of the Central Executive Committee of the Communist Party of Ireland, and at the time teaching "The ABC of Communism" as a lecturer at the Workers' College. [1]
In 1939, Mairin Mitchell was highly critical of the Irish leftists, including O'Neill, for their views on the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, and wrote to Desmond Ryan in September "Brian O'Neill, Bloomsbury, and Daiken will sing Russia right or wrong." [6]
In 1941, O'Neill was still editor of The Irish Workers' Voice, the Communist newspaper, but it folded that year when the Communist Party of Ireland split and ceased to function, soon after the Soviet Union was forced into the Second World War. [7]
In 1942, O'Neill was taken on as a journalist by The Irish Press , [1] and by the late 1940s he was the newspaper’s Foreign News Editor. On 3 February 1948, a Third Secretary at the US Legation in Dublin, R. M. Beaudry, reported a conversation with Father McLaughlin of Boyle, County Roscommon, who considered that The Irish Press had been infiltrated by "communistic elements", including O'Neill. He said O'Neill had been born in New Jersey and was also writing for the Communist Party USA’s Daily Worker and was a foreign correspondent for the Soviet news agency TASS. [8]
During the Emergency, the Irish Directorate of Military Intelligence was concerned about The Irish Press having O’Neill, Maire Comerford, R. M. Fox, Geoffrey Coulter, and Tom Mullins on its staff. [9]
In 1964, O'Neill wrote a tribute to Leslie Daiken (1912–1964), [10] and he was still working for The Irish Press in the 1970s. [1]
In 1971, O’Neill was involved in a public dispute about the authenticity of the "Castle document", which Thomas Kelly of Sinn Féin had read to Dublin Corporation in April 1916, claiming it had been leaked from Dublin Castle and detailed British plans to arrest leaders of the Irish Volunteers, Sinn Féin, and the Gaelic League. [11] In an article in The Irish Press of 15 April 1971, O’Neill quoted an answer given in the House of Commons to the effect that the document had been a ruse de guerre. In reply, Geraldine Plunkett Dillon insisted the document had been genuine and had been decoded by her brother, Joseph Plunkett; [12] and Síle Nic Ghabhann, writing in Irish, defended her father, Eugene Smyth, who had claimed to have leaked the document. [13] On 29 April, O’Neill responded, citing Desmond Ryan, Diarmuid Lynch, Maureen Wall, Leon Ó Broin, and F. X. Martin, and insisted that the document had been a forgery by Joseph Plunkett and Sean Mac Diarmada. [14] A 21st-century assessment by Fearghal McGarry is that the Castle document was an edited version of a genuine one leaked by Smyth outlining British plans in the event of conscription. [15]
The Easter Rising, also known as the Easter Rebellion, was an armed insurrection in Ireland during Easter Week in April 1916. The Rising was launched by Irish republicans against British rule in Ireland with the aim of establishing an independent Irish Republic while the United Kingdom was fighting the First World War. It was the most significant uprising in Ireland since the rebellion of 1798 and the first armed conflict of the Irish revolutionary period. Sixteen of the Rising's leaders were executed from May 1916. The nature of the executions, and subsequent political developments, ultimately contributed to an increase in popular support for Irish independence.
The Irish Independent is an Irish daily newspaper and online publication which is owned by Independent News & Media (INM), a subsidiary of Mediahuis.
Eoin O'Duffy was an Irish military commander, police commissioner and fascist leader. O'Duffy was the leader of the Monaghan Brigade of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and a prominent figure in the Ulster IRA during the Irish War of Independence. In this capacity, he became Chief of Staff of the IRA in 1922. He accepted the Anglo-Irish Treaty and as a general became Chief of Staff of the National Army in the Irish Civil War, on the pro-Treaty side.
The Army Comrades Association (ACA), later the National Guard, then Young Ireland and finally League of Youth, but best known by the nickname the Blueshirts, was a paramilitary organisation in the Irish Free State, founded as the Army Comrades Association in Dublin on 9 February 1932. The group provided physical protection for political groups such as Cumann na nGaedheal from intimidation and attacks by the IRA. Some former members went on to fight for the Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War after the group had been dissolved.
Joseph Mary Plunkett was an Irish nationalist, republican, poet, journalist, revolutionary and a leader of the 1916 Easter Rising. Joseph Mary Plunkett married Grace Gifford in 1916, seven hours before his execution.
Peadar Kearney was an Irish republican and composer of numerous rebel songs. In 1907 he wrote the lyrics to "A Soldier's Song", now the Irish national anthem. He was the uncle of Irish writers Brendan Behan, Brian Behan, and Dominic Behan.
The Irish Citizen Army, or ICA, was a small paramilitary group of trained trade union volunteers from the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union (ITGWU) established in Dublin for the defence of workers' demonstrations from the Dublin Metropolitan Police. It was formed by James Larkin, James Connolly and Jack White on 23 November 1913. Other prominent members included Seán O'Casey, Constance Markievicz, Francis Sheehy-Skeffington, P. T. Daly and Kit Poole. In 1916, it took part in the Easter Rising, an armed insurrection aimed at ending British rule in Ireland.
The Communist Party of Ireland is an all-Ireland Marxist–Leninist communist party, founded in 1933 and re-founded in 1970. It rarely contests elections and has never had electoral success. The party is a member of the International Meeting of Communist and Workers' Parties.
The Connolly Column was the name given to a group of Irish republican socialist volunteers who fought for the Second Spanish Republic in the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War. They were named after James Connolly, the executed leader of the Irish Citizen Army. They were a company-strength unit of the XV International Brigade, which also included the US, British and Latin American battalions in Spain. The name is now retroactively applied to all Irish volunteers who fought for the Spanish Republic.
The Republican Congress was an Irish republican and Marxist-Leninist political organisation founded in 1934, when pro-communist republicans left the Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army. The Congress was led by such anti-Treaty veterans as Peadar O'Donnell, Frank Ryan and George Gilmore. In their later phase they were involved with the Communist International and International Brigades paramilitary; the Connolly Column.
The Spanish Civil War lasted from July 17, 1936 to April 1, 1939. While both sides in the Spanish Civil War attracted participants from Ireland, the majority sided with the Nationalist faction.
Richard Michael Fox, better known as R. M. Fox, was a journalist and historian of the Irish left.
The Irish Worker League was an Irish communist party, established in September 1923 by Jim Larkin, following his return to Ireland. Larkin re-established the newspaper The Irish Worker. The Irish Worker League (IWL) superseded the first Communist Party of Ireland and became Ireland's affiliate with the Communist International.
James Gralton was an Irish socialist leader who became a United States citizen after emigrating in 1909 and, later, the only Irishman ever deported from independent Ireland.
Fiona Plunkett 11 January 1896 – 12 July 1977 was an Irish republican involved in the organisation of the Easter 1916 Rising and a leading member of Cumann na mBan.
Revolutionary Workers' Groups (RWG) were left wing groups in Ireland officially founded in 1930 with the objective of creating a Revolutionary Workers' Party. Formed initially as the Preparatory Committee for the Formation of a Workers’ Revolutionary Party, it changed its name in November 1930. It was helped to be established by Bob Stewart and Tom Bell from the Communist Party of Great Britain and Comintern. In 1933 they disbanded and established the Communist Party of Ireland. By 1935 Tommy Geehan was a leading member of the party.
The Irish Worker's Voice is an official newspaper of the Communist Party of Ireland (CPI). The paper is published weekly on and off by the various guises under which the Communist party of Ireland was constituted. The first issue was on the 4th of April 1931 initially published by the Revolutionary Workers' Groups and edited by Tom Bell, the paper was relaunched when the W. T. Cosgrave government fell in March 1932, with Brian O'Neill as editor. The paper became the publication of the Communist Party of Ireland founded in 1933. The paper was named the Irish Workers' Voice to distinguish it from Jim Larkin’s The Irish Worker. The Irish Worker along with other left wing and republican newspapers were banned in Northern Ireland in 1940.
Geraldine "Gerry" Plunkett Dillon (1891–1986) was an Irish republican and member of Cumann na mBan, best known for her memoir All in the blood. She was the sister of Joseph Mary Plunkett, a signatory of the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic.
Leslie Herbert Daiken was an Irish-born advertising copywriter, editor, and writer on children's toys and games, in his youth in the 1930s a poet active in leftist politics and editor of the duplicated circular Irish Front.
Fearghal McGarry is an Irish historian specializing in the history of Ireland in the 20th century, currently Professor of Modern Irish History at Queen's University, Belfast.